Robert O'Dell, the proud father of Lance Cpl. Steven G. O'Dell, a Marine with Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron 366, displays pride in his three sons while he waits for Steven to return to Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point Aug. 21, after a 7-month deployment to Afghanistan in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. Steven followed in his older brothers footsteps, who of whom has for combat deployments with the Air Force and the other is going on a third combat tour with the Army, said his father.

MARINE CORPS AIR STATION CHERRY POINT, N.C. – A detachment of more than 100 Marines from Heavy Helicopter Squadron 366 returned home to Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point Aug. 21, after a 7-month deployment to Afghanistan in support of Operation Enduring Freedom.

Because of the array of operational commitments the squadron's Marines support, its OEF detachment combined forces with HMH-466 out of MCAS Miramar, Calif., to form the fully mission capable 'HMH-America'.
While deployed, the squadron employed its CH-53E Super Stallions to support ground troops by providing troop movements and logistics, said Cpl Jerry G. Parker, the detachment assistant operations chief.

"We lifted more than six million pounds of cargo, transported 4,000 passengers and carried out more than 190 tactical operations missions where personnel were inserted and extracted from objective areas."

All-in-all, HMH-America completed more than 5,000 flight hours while providing tactical and operational support, said Parker.

In addition to their accomplishments in the air, the approximately 240 HMH-America Marines performed more than 100 drug interdiction operations, where they helped law enforcement officials seize and destroy narcotics worth about $3 million.

"The HMH-America team worked flawlessly while they were out there," said Anderson. "There wasn't a mission that they could not accomplish and they brought back everyone that they took out. That in itself is the biggest mission we accomplished."

This work, HMH-366 detachment returns after demonstrating heavy lifting capabilities, by LCpl Andrea Cleopatra Dickerson, identified by DVIDS, is free of known copyright restrictions under U.S. copyright law.